International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2020)

New Cav1.2 Channelopathy with High-Functioning Autism, Affective Disorder, Severe Dental Enamel Defects, a Short QT Interval, and a Novel <i>CACNA1C</i> Loss-of-Function Mutation

  • Dominique Endres,
  • Niels Decher,
  • Isabell Röhr,
  • Kirsty Vowinkel,
  • Katharina Domschke,
  • Katalin Komlosi,
  • Andreas Tzschach,
  • Birgitta Gläser,
  • Miriam A. Schiele,
  • Kimon Runge,
  • Patrick Süß,
  • Florian Schuchardt,
  • Kathrin Nickel,
  • Birgit Stallmeyer,
  • Susanne Rinné,
  • Eric Schulze-Bahr,
  • Ludger Tebartz van Elst

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms21228611
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 22
p. 8611

Abstract

Read online

Complex neuropsychiatric-cardiac syndromes can be genetically determined. For the first time, the authors present a syndromal form of short QT syndrome in a 34-year-old German male patient with extracardiac features with predominant psychiatric manifestation, namely a severe form of secondary high-functioning autism spectrum disorder (ASD), along with affective and psychotic exacerbations, and severe dental enamel defects (with rapid wearing off his teeth) due to a heterozygous loss-of-function mutation in the CACNA1C gene (NM_000719.6: c.2399A > C; p.Lys800Thr). This mutation was found only once in control databases; the mutated lysine is located in the Cav1.2 calcium channel, is highly conserved during evolution, and is predicted to affect protein function by most pathogenicity prediction algorithms. L-type Cav1.2 calcium channels are widely expressed in the brain and heart. In the case presented, electrophysiological studies revealed a prominent reduction in the current amplitude without changes in the gating behavior of the Cav1.2 channel, most likely due to a trafficking defect. Due to the demonstrated loss of function, the p.Lys800Thr variant was finally classified as pathogenic (ACMG class 4 variant) and is likely to cause a newly described Cav1.2 channelopathy.

Keywords